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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > Orthodox Churches
The first comprehensive introduction to the Orthodox Church in the
United States from 1794 to the present, this book includes a
succinct picture of the distinctive history of Orthodoxy and its
particular perspectives on the Christian faith. Attention is given
to the contacts between the Orthodox Church and other Christian
churches, as well as its contributions to the ecumenical movement.
Over 80 biographies of major Orthodox leaders in America also are
included along with an annotated bibliography of the writings of
the major Orthodox theologians. The book begins with a review of
the historical characteristics and distinctive faith affirmations
of Orthodoxy, which has a history that is quite different from
Roman Catholicism and Protestantism. Subsequent chapters examine
the historical development of the Orthodox Church in this country,
with special attention being paid to the early mission in Alaska,
the effects of immigration, the organizational developments of
parishes and dioceses, the effects of old world politics, the
movement toward greater unity, and the distinctive features of
American Orthodoxy today. The material is fresh and inclusive,
covering all major branches and treating them with an irenic
spirit. The biographies are thoughtful and informative, and there
is a tremendous amount of bibliographic and reference material.
Scholars, practitioners in every faith, and laypersons will find
this volume indispensable.
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Twenty-four contributions on matters dealing with Byzantine and
Oriental lands, people, and cultures through different
perspectives, including history, maritime trade, documents,
travelers, and art. These essays trace the history of the relations
between the Greeks and the peoples of the Middle East from Late
Antiquity up to the seventeenth century.
In Russian Orthodoxy on the Eve of Revolution, Vera Shevzov draws on a rich variety of previously untapped archival sources to reconstruct the religious world of the lay people. She traces the means by which men and women shaped their religious lives in an ecclesiastical system that was dominated by bureaucrats and monastic bishops. Focusing on various "centres" of their religious life - the temple, chapels, feasts, icons, and the Virgin Mary - she follows the religious processes and communal dynamics that lent these centres meaning. Russian Orthodoxy on the Eve of Revolution breaks new ground by giving voice to the previously ignored common people during one of the most tumultuous periods in the history of the church - and immediately preceding one of the most important events of the twentieth century.
The various versions of the Infancy Gospels illustrate how stories
about the Virgin and Child lend themselves to be told and retold -
much like the stories in the canonical Gospels. This first
translation of the full text of the Armenian Gospel of the Infancy,
itself derived from a sixth-century Syriac text that no longer
exists, provides two variants of the famous narrative and several
recensions or ancient editions. Stories about Jesus, many of them
unique to this gospel, are included to show how he exercised his
sovereign and divine will even as a child. This edition also
contains three early Armenian versions of the Protevangelium of
James, which with other ancient sources dependent on it (like the
Infancy Gospel of Thomas and the Gospel of Pseudo-Matthew)
constitute the basic tradition in the formation of the later
Infancy Gospels. These writings are our earliest sources about the
parents of the Virgin Mary (Joachim and Anne) and her miraculous
birth. They also form the basis for the dogma of her Immaculate
Conception and perpetual virginity after the birth of Jesus, and
lay the ground for certain of the Marian feasts celebrated since
the fourth century. Terian's engaging introduction and annotation
of the texts place this rare document clearly in its cultural and
historical context and provide extensive references to the
surrounding textual tradition. These extraordinary stories will
appeal to all with an interest in the early church.
A short walk from the glistening Nile nestled in a dusty Cairo
street lies the Coptic Church of St. Peter and St. Paul, known
locally as the Boutrosiya. If one were to enter through one of the
seven doors, walk down the columned central aisle past Venetian
mosaics and silk curtains, they would find the tomb of Boutros
Pasha Ghali. Resting on two steps of black marble, decorated with
colourful crosses, are written his last words: 'God knows that I
never did anything that harmed my country'. The first Copt to be
awarded the title of Pasha, the career of Boutros Pasha Ghali
inextricably linked his family's fate to that of Egypt. From early
whispers of independence to the last Mubarak government and the
United Nations, the Boutros-Ghali's have not only been a force in
the political, cultural and religious life of Egypt, but
internationally. This book traces the illustrious history of this
family from 1864 to the present day. Through assassinations, wars
and elections, it illuminates the events that have shaped Egyptian
and Coptic life, revealing the family's crucial role in the
creation of modern Egypt and what their legacy may mean for the
future of their country.
Recent archaeological discoveries within the Upper Tigris region in
Southeastern Turkey offer a unique opportunity to understand the
dynamics of the Assyrian Empire borderlands. Within a few years
most of the region will be irreversibly submerged, due to the
construction of the Ilisu dam, the biggest hydroelectric power
plant project in Turkey. It is of paramount importance to
understand and record as much data as possible about the local
communities and the foreign connections that flowered in this area.
The standard edition of the Curetonian manuscript, with the Sinai
text in the footnotes. One volume contains the Syriac text with
facing English translation; the other contains a discussion of the
Old Syriac version.
A collection of studies on the Syriac sixth century writer Jacob of
Sarug by a team of international scholars, including Susan Ashbrook
Harvey, Sebastian P. Brock, Sharbil Iskandar Bcheiry, Khalid Dinno,
Sidney Griffith, Mary Hansbury, Amir Harrak, George A. Kiraz,
Edward Matthews, Aho Shemunkasho, and Lucas Van Rompay.
From diverse international and multi-disciplinary perspectives,
the contributors to this volume analyze the experiences, challenges
and responses of Orthodox churches to the foundational
transformations associated with the dissolution of the USSR. Those
transformations heightened the urgency of questions about Orthodox
identity and relations with the world - states, societies, and the
religious and cultural other.
The volume focuses on six distinct concepts: Orthodox identity,
perceptions of the 'other, ' critiques of the West, European
values, interreligious progress, and new and uncharted challenges
that have arisen with the expansion of Russian Orthodox
activity.
In modern Russia, the question is raised about the revival of the
spirituality of the population, which increases interest in
studying the history of the church. In the pre-revolutionary
period, the Orthodox Church in the Russian Empire had a significant
impact on the formation of national culture and statehood. Actively
cooperating with the state, the Orthodox Church has accumulated
vast experience in the field of education, missionary work, and
charity. This experience in today's Russia can be used to solve the
most important tasks in the moral education of young people who
will contribute to the future of Russia. Examining the Relationship
Between the Russian Orthodox Church and Secular Authorities in the
19th and 20th Centuries focuses on the system of spiritual
education, the social and psychological characteristics of the
clergy of the Russian Orthodox Church, and the tradition of
Orthodox pilgrimage. It explores the key areas of charitable and
educational activities of the Orthodox Church during the period of
religious transformation in the 19th and 20th centuries. Covering
topics such as missionary activity, secular authority, and church
land tenure, this premier reference source is a dynamic resource
for historians, anthropologists, sociologists, researchers in
politics and religion, librarians, students and faculty of higher
education, and academicians.
Patriarch Nikon, the most energetic, creative, influential, and
obstinate of Russia's early religious leaders, dominates this book.
As Patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church, Nikon's most important
initiative was to bring Russian religious rituals into line with
Greek Orthodox tradition, from which Russia's practices had
diverted. Kiev's Monastery of the Caves served as a medium for his
transmission of Greek notions. Nikon and Tsar Alexis I (r.
1645-1676) envisioned Russia's transformed into a new Holy Land.
Eventually, Nikon became a challenger for Imperial authority. While
his reforms endure, failed policies and poor political judgment
were decisive in his fall and in the Patriarchate's reduction in
status. Ultimately, the reforms of Peter the Great (r. 1682-1725)
led to its replacement by a new, government-controlled body, the
Holy Synod, which nevertheless carried out a continuity of Nikon's
policies. This exceptional volume contextualizes Nikon's
Patriarchate as part of the broader continuities in Russian History
and serves as a bridge to the present, where Russia is forging new
relationships between Church and power.
The meditative prayer practices known as Hesychasm and the Jesus
Prayer have played an important role in the history of Eastern
Orthodox Christianity. This book explores how these prayer
practices have spread from a primarily monastic setting within
Orthodox Christianity, into general Orthodox Christian usage, and
finally into wider contemporary Western culture. As a result of
this gradual geographic shift from a local to a global setting,
caused mainly by immigration and dissemination of related texts,
there has been a parallel shift of interpretation causing
disagreement. By analyzing ongoing conversations on the practices,
this book shows how such disagreements are due to differences in
the way groups understand the ideas of authority and tradition.
These fundamental ideas lie beneath much of the current discussion
on particular aspects of the practices and also contribute to the
wider academic debate over the globalization and appropriation of
religious traditions.
Jacob of Sarug (451-521) was a prolific writer of the Syriac Church
and was known as "the flute of the Holy Spirit and the harp of the
believing church". Sebastian Brock gives the Syriac edition of six
homilies written by Jacob: on the birth of our Lord; on the baptism
of our Lord; on the Great Lent; on Palm Sunday; on Good Friday; on
Easter Sunday. The text is based on an ancient manuscripts
preserved in London and dated 609.
Focusing on one of Russia's most powerful and wide-reaching
institutions in a period of shattering dynastic crisis and immense
territorial and administrative expansion, this book addresses
manifestations of religious thought, practice, and artifacts
revealing the permeability of political boundaries and fluid
transfers of ideas, texts, people, objects, and "sacred spaces"
with the rest of the Christian world. The historical background to
the establishment Russia's Patriarchate, its chief religious
authority, in various eparchies from Late Antiquity sets the stage.
"The Tale of the Establishment of the Patriarchate," crucial for
legitimizing and promoting both this institution and close
cooperation with the established tetrarchy of Eastern Orthodox
patriarchs emerged in the 1620s. Their attitude remained mixed,
however, with persisting unease concerning Russian pretensions to
equality. Regarding the most crucial "other" for Christianity's
self-identification, the contradictions inherent in Christianity's
appropriation of the Old Testament became apparent in, for example,
the realm's imperfectly enforced ban on resident Jews. The concept
of ordained royalty emerged in the purported co-rulership of the
initial Romanov Tsar Michael and his father, Patriarch Filaret. As
a pertinent foil to Moscow's patriarchs, challenges arose from
Petro Mohyla, a metropolitan of the then totally separate Kievan
church, whose Academy became the most important educational
institution for the Russian Orthodox Church into the eighteenth
century, combining a Romanian regal, Polish aristocratic, and
Ukrainian Orthodox self-identity.
Am Beispiel der Initiationssakramente (Taufe, Firmung,
Eucharistiefeier) und der Priesterweihe wird einerseits die
Konsekration der Materie (Wasser, Myronoel, Brot und Wein) und des
Empfangers dargestellt, anderseits das Konsekrationsgeschehen der
einzelnen liturgischen Vollzuge nach der syrisch antiochenischen
Liturgie miteinander verglichen, analysiert und kommentiert.
Severus of Antioch is by far the most prolific and well known
theologian of the non-Chalcedonian churches. Although his life and
writings came to our knowledge in Syriac, gaining him the title
"Crown of the Syriac Literature," many texts relating to his life
and works survived in the Coptic and Copto-Arabic tradition, as
well as a number of other texts that were traditionally attributed
to him. This book provides an analysis of these texts as well as a
discussion of the veneration of Severus of Antioch in the Coptic
Church.
This is the standard edition of the chronicle of Bar Hebraeus in
Syriac and English translation. It gives the political history of
the world from the creation to the year AD 1286.
There are saints in Orthodox Christian culture who overturn the
conventional concept of sainthood. Their conduct may be unruly and
salacious, they may blaspheme and even kill - yet, mysteriously,
those around them treat them with even more reverence. Such saints
are called 'holy fools'. In this pioneering study Sergey A. Ivanov
examines the phenomenon of holy foolery from a cultural standpoint.
He identifies its prerequisites and its development in religious
thought, and traces the emergence of the first hagiographic texts
describing these paradoxical saints. He describes the beginnings of
holy foolery in Egyptian monasteries of the fifth century, followed
by its high point in the cities of Byzantium, with an eventual
decline in the twelfth to fourteenth centuries. He also compares
the important Russian tradition of holy fools, which in some form
has survived to this day.
Here is the book that converted C. S. Lewis from atheism to
Christianity. This history of mankind, Christ, and Christianity is
to some extent a conscious rebuttal of H. G. Wells' Outline of
History, which embraced both the evolutionary origins of humanity
and the mortal humanity of Jesus. Whereas Orthodoxy detailed
Chesterton's own spiritual journey, this book illustrates the
spiritual journey of humanity, or at least of Western civilization.
A book for both mind and spirit.
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